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Nuclear Families in a Nuclear Age: Theorising the Family in 1950s West Germany
Abstract
<jats:p>This essay explores the imagination of the family in 1950s West Germany, where
the family emerged at the heart of political, economic and moral reconstruction. To
uncover the intellectual origins of familialism, the essay presents trans-war intellectual
biographies of Franz-Josef Würmeling, Germany's first family minister, and Helmut
Schelsky, the most prominent family sociologist of the period. Their stories demonstrate
that the new centrality of the family was not a retreat from ideology, as is often
argued, but was in fact a reinstatement of interwar ideologies in a new key: social
Catholicism in the former case, National Socialism in the latter. These divergent
trajectories explain why Würmeling and Schelsky, despite being two central defenders
of the family in the 1950s, could not work together. The essay follows their careers
into the 1960s, suggesting that the fractious state of familialism in the 1950s helps
us to understand its collapse in the face of the sexual revolution.</jats:p>
Type
Journal articlePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22936Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1017/s0960777316000539Publication Info
CHAPPEL, JAMES (2017). Nuclear Families in a Nuclear Age: Theorising the Family in 1950s West Germany. Contemporary European History, 26(1). pp. 85-109. 10.1017/s0960777316000539. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22936.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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James Gregory Chappel
Gilhuly Family Assoc Professor
James Chappel is the Gilhuly Family Associate Professor of History at Duke University.
He works on the intellectual history of modern Europe and the United States, focusing
on themes of religion, gender, and the family. His first book, Catholic Modern (Harvard,
2018), asks about the transformation of the Catholic Church in 20th century Europe.
How did Catholics, long affiliated with monarchism and anti

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